Scientists have found traces of leaked radiation from Japan’s 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident off the coast of California. Radiation experts, though, say the levels are harmless.

Trace amounts of
isotopes linked to Fukushima radiation were detected about 100
miles (160km) west of Eureka, a city in northern California, the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), a
Massachusetts-based research organization, announced Monday in a
press release.

Volunteers collected samples found to contain trace amounts of
the short-lived isotope cesium-134, considered the ‘fingerprint’
of Fukushima, during a research expedition from Alaska to
California. Though cesium-134 is specific to the Fukushima
disaster, another form of the isotope, cesium-137, had already
been introduced to our oceans during weapons testing in the 1950s
and ’60s.

The levels of radiation detected in the WHOI effort were deemed
“far below where one might expect any measurable risk to
human health or marine life,” according to the release. In
an interview with Northwest Public Radio (NWPR), Ken Buesseler, a
senior researcher at WHOI, said that although he was reluctant to
“trivialize” the findings, he isn’t concerned about
swimming or eating fish from local waters.

The radiation levels detected are reportedly 1,000 times lower
than the acceptable limit for drinking water set by the US
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Though Canadian oceanographers have reported the presence of
cesium-134 off the shores of Vancouver Island since 2013,
seawater samples collected directly at the shore from California
to Alaska by concerned citizens since the beginning of this year,
through a crowd-funded "citizen science" project also
initiated by Buesseler, tested negative for the offending
isotope. The US government does not currently fund ocean
radiation monitoring.

Meanwhile, a parallel research effort conducted by the radiation
health lab at Oregon State University earlier this year did not
find any traces of radiation in samples collected along the
Pacific Northwest coast.

The oceanographers at WHOI believe it’s important to keep close
watch on the radiation levels in our oceans.

“The spread of radioactivity across the Pacific is an
evolving situation that demands careful, consistent
monitoring,” the press release says.

After undergoing meltdowns in three of its reactors in March
2011, TEPCO’s Fukushima plant released huge amounts of
radioactive material. Contaminated water, used to cool the
overheating fuel rods, streamed into the ocean. The cleanup
process is expected to take decades.